Feeling overwhelmed by the Quran? Learn how the triliteral root system and four noun properties help you master 75% of the text with just 500 words.

The category of ism is much broader than the English 'noun.' It includes people, places, and objects, but also adjectives and even adverbs; the technical definition is a word that points to a meaning in itself but is not tied to time.
Создано выпускниками Колумбийского университета в Сан-Франциско
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Создано выпускниками Колумбийского университета в Сан-Франциско

Lena: You know, Miles, I was looking at a page of the Quran the other day and felt totally overwhelmed by the complexity. But then I found this incredible fact: a core set of just about 500 high-frequency words actually makes up nearly 75% of the entire text.
Miles: It’s wild, right? Most of those are what we call an *ism*, or a noun. In Arabic, an *ism* is the ultimate building block—it’s a word that stands all on its own without needing a tense to make sense.
Lena: Exactly! And the coolest part is the "triliteral root" system. It’s like a mathematical engine where three base letters, like {k-t-b} for writing, branch out into everything from "book" to "library."
Miles: It’s so elegant. But the mistake most beginners make is treating Arabic nouns like English ones, ignoring the four essential properties every *ism* carries. So, let’s explore how to identify these nouns and master their properties.